Subjects were seen at the study clinic at the time of vaccination (∼6, 10 and 14 weeks of age), at one month following the third dose of vaccine/placebo (∼age 18 weeks of age), at one year of age and, for those subjects who agreed to follow-up beyond one year, at final visit (18–24 months of age). In addition, study staff visited the subjects’ homes at weekly intervals throughout
the study period. Parents were encouraged to bring the subjects to clinic in the event of illness (unscheduled visits). In the case of severe illness requiring inpatient care, children were hospitalized at the Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital (QECH), a tertiary referral hospital in Blantyre. Voluntary testing of infants for HIV infection using ELISA and PCR was undertaken as previously described [14]. Gastroenteritis was defined as the passage of three or more looser-than-normal stools GS-7340 research buy in a 24 h period, with or
without vomiting. Parents completed a diary card for each gastroenteritis episode, the severity of which was graded according to the Vesikari scoring system with severe disease defined by a score of ≥11 [15]. Parents were asked to collect a stool specimen at soon as possible after the onset of gastroenteritis. Stool samples were frozen at −70 °C until shipped to GSK Biologicals, Rixensart, Belgium for rotavirus testing by ELISA (Rotaclone, Meridian Biosciences, Cincinnati, OH), following which G and P types were determined at DDL Diagnostic Laboratory (Voorburg, The Netherlands) Rapamycin supplier by a testing algorithm using RT-PCR and reverse hybridization [16]. Serum for anti-rotavirus IgA determination was obtained immediately Ketanserin prior to administration of the first dose of vaccine/placebo in a ∼10% systematically selected subset of subjects (at ∼6 weeks of age) and at one month following receipt of the third vaccine/placebo dose in all subjects (at ∼18 weeks of age). Serum was frozen at −20 °C prior to investigation for anti-rotavirus IgA by ELISA (GSK Biologicals),
with an assay cut-off at 20 U/ml. Seroconversion was defined as the presence of a demonstrable IgA titre at one month post-vaccination, in those infants without demonstrable pre-vaccination antibody. Infants who had received the complete vaccination course and had entered the efficacy surveillance period comprised the according-to-protocol (ATP) efficacy cohort. Efficacy analysis began at 2 weeks after receipt of the 3rd dose of vaccine/placebo, and finished at final follow-up visit (age 18–24 months). The primary endpoint was the assessment of pooled vaccine efficacy (two dose RIX4414 plus three dose RIX4414) against severe rotavirus gastroenteritis up to one year of age for the combined Malawi and South African populations [14].